.\" dhclient.8 .\" .\" Copyright (c) 2004,2007 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") .\" Copyright (c) 1996-2003 by Internet Software Consortium .\" .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any .\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above .\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. .\" .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ISC DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES .\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF .\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL ISC BE LIABLE FOR .\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES .\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN .\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT .\" OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. .\" .\" Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. .\" 950 Charter Street .\" Redwood City, CA 94063 .\" .\" http://www.isc.org/ .\" .\" Support and other services are available for ISC products - see .\" http://www.isc.org for more information. .\" .\" $Id: dhclient.8,v 1.1 2007/11/12 23:16:08 dcantrel Exp $ .\" .TH dhclient 8 .SH NAME dhclient - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol Client .SH SYNOPSIS .B dhclient [ .B -p .I port ] [ .B -d ] [ .B -e .I VAR=value ] [ .B -q ] [ .B -1 ] [ .B -r ] [ .B -x ] [ .B -lf .I lease-file ] [ .B -pf .I pid-file ] [ .B -cf .I config-file ] [ .B -sf .I script-file ] [ .B -s server ] [ .B -g relay ] [ .B -n ] [ .B -nw ] [ .B -w ] [ .B -B ] [ .B -I .I dhcp-client-identifier ] [ .B -H .I host-name .R | .B -F fqdn.fqdn ] [ .B -V .I vendor-class-identifier ] [ .B -R .I request option list ] [ .B -T .I timeout ] [ .I if0 [ .I ...ifN ] ] .SH DESCRIPTION The Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Client, dhclient, provides a means for configuring one or more network interfaces using the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, BOOTP protocol, or if these protocols fail, by statically assigning an address. .SH OPERATION .PP The DHCP protocol allows a host to contact a central server which maintains a list of IP addresses which may be assigned on one or more subnets. A DHCP client may request an address from this pool, and then use it on a temporary basis for communication on network. The DHCP protocol also provides a mechanism whereby a client can learn important details about the network to which it is attached, such as the location of a default router, the location of a name server, and so on. .PP On startup, dhclient reads the .IR dhclient.conf for configuration instructions. It then gets a list of all the network interfaces that are configured in the current system. For each interface, it attempts to configure the interface using the DHCP protocol. .PP In order to keep track of leases across system reboots and server restarts, dhclient keeps a list of leases it has been assigned in the dhclient.leases(5) file. On startup, after reading the dhclient.conf file, dhclient reads the dhclient.leases file to refresh its memory about what leases it has been assigned. .PP When a new lease is acquired, it is appended to the end of the dhclient.leases file. In order to prevent the file from becoming arbitrarily large, from time to time dhclient creates a new dhclient.leases file from its in-core lease database. The old version of the dhclient.leases file is retained under the name .IR dhclient.leases~ until the next time dhclient rewrites the database. .PP Old leases are kept around in case the DHCP server is unavailable when dhclient is first invoked (generally during the initial system boot process). In that event, old leases from the dhclient.leases file which have not yet expired are tested, and if they are determined to be valid, they are used until either they expire or the DHCP server becomes available. .PP A mobile host which may sometimes need to access a network on which no DHCP server exists may be preloaded with a lease for a fixed address on that network. When all attempts to contact a DHCP server have failed, dhclient will try to validate the static lease, and if it succeeds, will use that lease until it is restarted. .PP A mobile host may also travel to some networks on which DHCP is not available but BOOTP is. In that case, it may be advantageous to arrange with the network administrator for an entry on the BOOTP database, so that the host can boot quickly on that network rather than cycling through the list of old leases. .PP The names of the network interfaces that dhclient should attempt to configure may be specified on the command line. If no interface names are specified on the command line dhclient will normally identify all network interfaces, eliminating non-broadcast interfaces if possible, and attempt to configure each interface. .PP It is also possible to specify interfaces by name in the .B dhclient.conf(5) file. If interfaces are specified in this way, then the client will only configure interfaces that are either specified in the configuration file or on the command line, and will ignore all other interfaces. .SH OPTIONS .TP .BI \-p\ The UDP port number the DHCP client should listen and transmit on. If unspecified, .B dhclient uses the default port 68. This option is mostly useful for debugging purposes. If a different port is specified for the client to listen and transmit on, the client will also use a different destination port - one greater than the specified destination port. .TP .BI \-d Force .B dhclient to run as a foreground process. This is useful when running the client under a debugger, or when running it out of inittab on System V systems. .TP .BI \-e\ VAR=value Define additional environment variables for the environment where dhclient-script executes. You may specify multiple .B \-e options on the command line. .TP .BI \-q Suppress all terminal and log output except error messages. .TP .BI \-1 Try one to get a lease. On failure, exit with code 2. .TP .BI \-r Tell .B dhclient to release the current lease it has from the server. This is not required by the DHCP protocol, but some ISPs require their clients to notify the server if they wish to release an assigned IP address. .TP .BI \-lf\ Path to the lease database file. If unspecified, the default .B DBDIR/dhclient.leases is used. .TP .BI \-pf\ Path to the process ID file. If unspecified, the default .B RUNDIR/dhclient.pid is used. .TP .BI \-cf\ Path to the client configuration file. If unspecified, the default .B ETCDIR/dhclient.conf is used. .TP .BI \-sf\ Path to the network configuration script invoked by .B dhclient when it gets a lease. If unspecified, the default .B CLIENTBINDIR/dhclient-script is used. .TP .BI \-s\ Specifiy the server IP address or fully qualified domain name to transmit DHCP protocol messages to. Normally, .B dhclient transmits these messages to 255.255.255.255 (the IP limited broadcast address). Overriding this is mostly useful for debugging purposes. .TP .BI \-g\ Only for debugging. Set the giaddr field of all packets the client sends to the IP address specified. This should not be expected to work in any consistent or useful way. .TP .BI \-n Do not configure any interfaces. Most useful combined with the .B -w option. .TP .BI \-nw Become a daemon process immediately (nowait) rather than waiting until an IP address has been acquired. .TP .BI \-w Keep running even if no network interfaces are found. The .B omshell program can be used to notify the client when a network interface has been added or removed so it can attempt to configure an IP address on that interface. .TP .BI \-B Set the BOOTP broadcast flag in request packets so servers will always broadcast replies. .TP .BI \-I\ Specify the dhcp-client-identifier option to send to the DHCP server. .TP .BI \-H\ Specify the host-name option to send to the DHCP server. The host-name string only contains the client's hostname prefix, to which the server will append the ddns-domainname or domain-name options, if any, to derive the fully qualified domain name of the client. The .B -H option cannot be used with the .B -F option. .TP .BI \-F\ Specify the fqdn.fqdn option to send to the DHCP server. This option cannot be used with the .B -H option. The fqdn.fqdn option must specify the complete domain name of the client host, which the server may use for dynamic DNS updates. .TP .BI \-V\ Specify the vendor-class-identifier option to send to the DHCP server. .TP .BI \-R\